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Adderley is a lawyer who has worked as legal counsel for Bahamas First General Insurance, [2] and as a legal and compliance manager [3] and corporate secretary for Bahamas First Holdings. [4] [5] From 2017, she was a member of the Progressive Liberal Party's constitution committee to review its policies. [6]
ZNS-1 (branded as Radio Bahamas) is the oldest broadcast station in the Bahamas. It has a news–talk format, and broadcasts on 1540 kHz and 104.5 MHz in Nassau, with a repeater in Freeport on 107.7 MHz. It is under ownership of the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas.
ZNS radio was founded in 1937 to broadcast hurricane warnings to the islands throughout the archipelago. At its inception, the station broadcast for two hours a day, featuring news and musical recordings from the BBC [1] and Nassau sources. The radio station eventually established another transmitter in Freeport on the island of Grand Bahama.
The following radio stations broadcast on AM frequency 1000 kHz: [1] 1000 AM is a United States and Mexican [ 2 ] clear-channel frequency. [ 3 ] KNWN Seattle , WMVP Chicago and XEOY Mexico City [ 4 ] share Class A status on 1000 kHz.
It is under ownership of the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas. The Bahamas' ITU prefix is officially C6-, though it still uses its older ZN- prefix for most of its AM/FM radio and television stations from when it was a United Kingdom colony, though has listed ZNS-3's call sign as C6B-3 in the past, similar to its other non-broadcast signals.
ZNS-3-FM (branded as Power 104.5) is a radio station in the Bahamas, having begun broadcasting as an FM repeater of ZNS-3, at the time the "Northern Service", before separating and adopting its current music format. It is under ownership of the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas. [1]
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ZNS-2 (branded as Inspiration 107.9) is the second-oldest radio station in the Bahamas, having begun broadcasting in 1962 on the AM band on 1240 kHz with a power of 1 kW. At some unknown point in the 1990s, the station migrated to the FM band on 107.9 MHz. It is under ownership of the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas.